Birds Britannia
By (Author) Stephen Moss
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins
1st April 2011
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
598.0941
Hardback
256
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 26mm
480g
Birds and bird lore provide a fascinating window onto our social and cultural history, and can tell us much about our changing relationship with the British landscape, our people and society.
This absorbing, chattily informative book of avian-human social history sets out the challenge ahead, in our ever-changing relationship with our feathered friends, to prevent another species of bird going the way of the auk.
The Daily Mail
The book is a riot of fact and information, familiar to seasoned twitchers but fascinating to the beginner. [] The message of the book is one of hope: the future of birds looks rosier now than it has done for some time. But we must not get complacent, and reading this book reminds us that bird-watching is a small act of revolution.
The Mail on Sunday
More praise for Stephen Mosss previous work:
Chatty, genuine, sincere and often quite funny.
British Wildlife
Full of good stuff if you want to settle down for a good read.
Bird Watching
Delightful
Harpers Bazaar
Stephen Moss is a television producer, writer and broadcaster specialising in British wildlife, especially birds. He has worked for the BBC Natural History Unit in Bristol and been responsible for many successful series, including Birding with Bill Oddie, Big Cat Diary, Springwatch, Autumnwatch and The Nature of Britain. He writes a monthly column on birdwatching for the Guardian, and also regularly contributes to BBC Wildlife, Gardeners World, and Countryfile magazines. His books include A Bird in the Bush: A Social History of Birdwatching, A Sky Full of Starlings and The Bumper Book of Nature.